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Stabilometric and Baropodometric Evaluation after Osteopathic Scaphoid Tug Manipulation

Journal: International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy Date: 2024/06, 19(6):Pages: 815–816. doi: Subito , type of study: randomized controlled trial

Full text    (https://ijspt.scholasticahq.com/article/117952-fifth-world-congress-of-sports-physical-therapy-scientific-abstracts)

Keywords:

baropodometry [4]
conference abstract [123]
foot [69]
OMT [3810]
osteopathic manipulative treatment [3831]
posture [99]
randomized controlled trial [909]
stabilometry [8]

Abstract:

Introduction. Stabilometry and baropodometry are currently the object of study in different health fields both at a preventive, diagnostic level, and as a method of treatment of different pathologies or imbalances. Osteopathic manipulative techniques applied to the foot sensor could modify the postural registers. Objectives. To analyze the modification of the stabilometric and baropodometric registers in the bipedal standing posture in healthy subjects after the application of the osteopathic manipulative technique of TUG of the scaphoid. Method. A randomized experimental study was performed with a sample of 36 subjects (intervention group n=17; control group n=19). The intervention group underwent an osteopathic scaphoid TUG intervention, while the control group was given a placebo. Before and after the intervention, both groups underwent a stabilometric and baropodometric analysis by means of a pressure platform using the standards of the Association Français de Pos- turologie. Statistical analysis was carried out with IBM SPSS Statistics, version 19.0 (Shapiro-Wilks test, analysis of QQ and Q-Q normality graphs without trend, Levene’s test, ANOVA, Bonferroni correction and Cohen’s d). Results. The inter- and intra-group post-intervention comparative analysis showed that there were no significant differences in the stabilometric and baropodometric variables studied, except for the support surface variable which showed significant intra-group results both in the control group (differences in the right foot p=0.02) and in the intervention group (left foot p=0.032), which suggests an anomaly or influence of some parameter not controlled in the study or in the measurement process. Conclusions. Osteopathic TUG manipulation of the scaphoid does not modify the stabilometric or baropodometric recordings in the bipedal standing posture in healthy subjects.


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